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I think just like butter ghee will vary from brand to brand. Purity Farms brand was the first one I tried and I wasn't impressed...at all. Then I ordered from Pure Indian Farms and their ghee was fantastic (at least to me), a really rich flavor. They also have these falvored ghees that are lovely as well, the Digestive Ghee is my favorite on a hot sweet potatoe or even a bit in a cup of hot coffee or tea. It's pretty pricey stuff though.
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Use your kerrygold to make ghee. Problem solved.
Making ghee is rediculously easy, plus you get to control the quality of the ingredients.
Cover mesh strainer with a few layers of cheesecloth. Take 2 sticks butter. Melt at low heat in a pan. Continue to cook until foamy. Watch carefully, and cook until the milk solids will begin to brown slightly and sink to the bottom of the pan. Remove from heat. Pour butter through strainer into a heatproof jar. Allow to cool, and store in the fridge.
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ghee is magic for roasting vegetables, imo
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It's not one size fits all.
I use coconut oil for cooking meat.
I use butter for vegetables.
I use ghee for frying eggs, and in Bulletproof Hot Cocoa.
Butter has a better taste because the milk solids provide some sweetness, but ghee is better for hot temps.
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[QUOTE=oxide;885340]It's not one size fits all.
I use coconut oil for cooking meat.
I use butter for vegetables.
I use ghee for frying eggs, and in Bulletproof Hot Cocoa.
Butter has a better taste because the milk solids provide some sweetness, but ghee is better for hot temps.[/QUOTE]
Very helpful - thank you!
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[QUOTE=Unicorn;884868]Use your kerrygold to make ghee..[/QUOTE]
+1.
I'm a strong proponent of making your own clarified butter. Very easy and you get to make sure it is coming from the best source possible.
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Kerrygold Irish butter is pretty ordinary as butter goes IMO and I much prefer the taste of President unsalted French butter from Normandy. Kerrygold is not a gourmet/premium brand in the UK. Butter can burn but if you add a little olive oil, it should be fine.
Ghee is amaaaazing. Like melted Cornish clotted cream (and not the bottled stuff available in US as that tastes nothing like real clotted cream). I buy mine from Spices of India as they have the manufacturers of Khanum ghee do their batches without ethyl butyrate and it's the only ghee I can find without that in the UK.
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Any grass fed butter works. Kerrygold is popular in the US since it is widely available.
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Do you have to refrigerate ghee? I have had it on my counter for quite a while....